What is wrong with
the United States of America?
By Philip Giraldi
November 01, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--
Prussian Major
General Carl von Clausewitz famously drew on
his own experience in the Napoleonic Wars to
examine war as a political phenomenon. In
his 1832 book “On War” he provided a
frequently quoted pithy summary of war
versus peace, writing in terms of
politico-military strategy that “War is a
mere continuation of politics by other
means.” In other words, war-making is a tool
provided to statesmen to achieve a nation’s
political objectives when all else fails.
One can reject the
ultimate amorality of Clausewitz’s thinking
about war while also recognizing that some
nations have historically speaking exploited
war-making as a tool for physical expansion
and the appropriation of foreigners’
resources. As far back as the Roman
Republic, the country’s elected leaders
doubled as heads of its consular armies,
which were expected to go out each spring to
expand the imperium. More recently, Britain
notably engaged in almost constant colonial
wars over the course of centuries to
establish what was to become history’s
largest empire.
America’s dominant
neocons characteristically believe they have
inherited the mantle of empire and of the
war powers that go hand-in-hand with that
attribute, but they have avoided other
aspects of the transition in turning the
United States into a nation made and
empowered by war. First of all, what comes
out the other end after one has initiated
hostilities with another country is
unpredictable. Starting with Korea and
continuing with Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq
as well as other minor operations in Latin
America, Africa and Asia, American
war-making has brought nothing but grief on
those on the receiving end with little
positive to show for the death, destruction
and accumulated debt. Also forgotten in the
rush to use force is the raison d’etre
to have a federal national government at
all, which is to bring tangible benefit to
the American people. There has been none of
that since 9/11 and even before, while
Washington’s hard-line stance on what has
become a proxy war against Russia over
Ukraine promises more pain – perhaps
disastrously so – and no real gain.
If one has any doubt
that going to war has become the principal
function of both Democrats and Republicans
in Washington, it is only necessary to
consider several stories that have appeared
in the past several weeks. The first comes
from the Republican side, and it includes a
possibly positive development. House
Minority leader Republican Kevin McCarthy
warned two weeks ago that the GOP will not
necessarily continue to write a “blank
check” for Ukraine if they obtain the House
majority in next month’s election,
reflecting his party’s growing skepticism
about unlimited financial support for the
corrupt regime in place in Kiev. McCarthy
explained “I think people are gonna be
sitting in a recession and they’re not going
to write a blank check to Ukraine. They just
won’t do it. … It’s not a free blank check.”
America’s uncritical
support for Ukraine, which has been a
contrivance by the White House and media
since the fighting started, has led to a
growing number of Republicans, particularly
some of those aligned with Donald Trump’s
“America First” approach, to challenge the
need for massive federal spending abroad at
a time of record-high inflation at home.
Since Russia launched its invasion in
February, Congress has approved tens of
billions in emergency security and
humanitarian assistance for Ukraine, while
the Biden administration has shipped
billions more worth of weapons and equipment
from military inventories, all done with
only limited or even no oversight of where
the money and weapons are winding up.
But, unfortunately,
the GOP is far from unified on its approach
to Ukraine-Russia. Congressman Liz Cheney
demonstrated that her apple did not fall far
from her father’s tree, taking some time off
from trying to hang Donald Trump
to denounce what she refers to as the
“Putin wing of the Republican Party.” She
put it this way: “You know, the Republican
Party is the party of Reagan, the party that
essentially won the Cold War. And you look
now at what I think is really a growing
Putin wing of the Republican Party.”
Cheney criticized Fox
News for “running propaganda” on the issue
and in particular called out Fox host Tucker
Carlson as “the biggest propagandist for
Putin on that network… You really have to
ask yourself, whose side is Fox on in this
battle? And how could it be that you have a
wing of the Republican Party that thinks
that America would be standing with Putin as
he conducts that brutal invasion of
Ukraine?”
Cheney notably did
not address the issue of how the war
developed in the first place because the US
and UK preferred saber rattling to diplomacy
with Moscow. Or why the United States feels
compelled to tip-toe to the brink of a
possible nuclear war over a foreign policy
issue that is of no real national interest
to the American people. And where did she
make her comments? At the McCain Institute
in Arizona. Yes, that’s a legacy of Senator
John McCain another Republican who never saw
a war he couldn’t enthusiastically support.
Both President Joe
Biden and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi
have confirmed that the US is in with
Ukraine until “victory” is obtained,
whatever that is supposed to mean, while
other Administration officials have
indicated that the actual purpose of the
fighting is to weaken Russia and remove
President Putin. White House press secretary
Karine Jean-Pierre glibly spouted the party
line when asked about McCarthy’s comments.
She thanked congressional leaders for
bipartisan work to “support Ukraine to
defend itself from Russia’s war crimes and
atrocities,” adding that “We will continue
to work with Congress and continue to
monitor those conversations on these efforts
and support Ukraine as long as it takes. We
are going to keep that promise that we’re
making to the brave Ukrainians who are
fighting every day, to fight for their
freedom and their democracy.”
Perhaps more bizarre
than Cheney’s comments is the tale of
a letter that was prepared by thirty
Democratic Party progressives urging US
support for negotiations to end the fighting
in Ukraine. The letter was prepared in June
but not released until last week before
being quickly retracted under pressure on
the following day. Pramila Jayapal, who
heads the Congressional Progressive Caucus,
said it was retracted because it “was being
conflated with [the] comments” made by
McCarthy over his warning about budget
cutting for Ukraine. Jayapal referred to the
letter as a “distraction,” but what she
really meant was that her group had no
desire to make common cause with the
Republicans over any issue, including war
and peace in an escalating conflict that is
manifestly pointless.
A clueless Jayapal
also took pains to contradict the message
put out by her own group, emphasizing that
there has been no opposition to the
administration’s Ukraine policy from
Democrats in Congress. She said Democrats
“have strongly and unanimously supported and
voted for every package of military,
strategic, and economic assistance to the
Ukrainian people.” She doubled down on the
White House message, affirming that the war
in Ukraine will only end with diplomacy
after “a Ukrainian victory.”
So basically, anyone
talking sense about Ukraine in Washington is
being shut down by forces within the
political parties themselves working
together with a compliant national media
that is mis-representing everything that is
taking place on the ground. It is a formula
for tragedy as the Biden administration has
shown no sign of seeking diplomacy with
Russia to end the conflict despite the
president’s recent surprising warning that
the world is now facing the highest risk of
nuclear “Armageddon,” which he, of course,
blames on Putin. Given all of that, in my
humble opinion a government that is unable
or unwilling to take reasonable steps to
protect its own citizens while also avoiding
a possible nuclear catastrophe that could
end up engulfing the entire world is
fundamentally evil and has lost all
legitimacy. It should recognize that fact
before submitting its resignation.
Philip M. Giraldi,
Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council
for the National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax
deductible educational foundation (Federal
ID Number #52-1739023) that seeks a more
interests-based U.S. foreign policy in the
Middle East. Website is
councilforthenationalinterest.org,
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA
20134 and its email is
inform@cnionline.org.